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Title: Art of the Korean Renaissance, 1400-1600
Description: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. 2009, 1st Edition. (ISBN: 9780300148916). Hardcover, with dust jacket. Book, English text.; Hardcover (cloth with dust jacket); 22.5 x 27.5 cm.; 1 Kg.; 140 pages with 99 illustrations of which 83 in colour.; Used with minor signs of wear on the exterior of the dust jacket and on the interior. Very good condition overall.; Cataloge from the exhibition "Art of the Korean Renaissance, 1400-1600" held at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, March 17 - June 21, 2009.; This volume and the exhibition it accompanies present a compelling and eloquent account of the artistic and cultural renaissance in Korea during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. The exquisite paintings, ceramics, metalware, lacquerware, and printed books featured in this publication are drawn from the holdings of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and other important museums, institutions, and private collections in Korea, the United States, Japan, and Europe. Many of these distinguished works have never before been seen in the United States. These masterpieces were produced under the aegis of Korea's revolutionary last dynasty, the Joseon, which was founded in 1392 and lasted until 1910. Within the dynasty's first two centuries, the Joseon rulers institutionalized the reorganization of civil and religious society undertaken by the previous Goryeo kings. Moreover, the new leaders sought to create a political, social, and cultural renewal following a period of Mongol domination and internal regression. As active patrons and collectors - and sometimes painters themselves - the Joseon royal family also brought a dynamic new vision to the nation's artistic traditions. Joseon society rested upon a reinterpretation of the Confucian principles that had long underpinned the East Asian world. Here, JaHyun Kim Haboush analyzes the initiatives that arose from the sustained this radically restructured civil society, including the development of an alphabet, hangeul, formulated to extend Neo-Confucian values to groups previously excluded from the wider culture; the diligent promotion of proper Neo-Confucian rites; and the relegation of Buddhism to the private sphere, often the royal and aristocratic courts. Soyoung Lee examines the uniquely Korean artistic currents, especially in painting and ceramics, that emerged during this period. Royal and elite patrons supported innovative secular art that transformed past traditions, both native and from the broader Confucian world, and encouraged the development of novel contemporary trends. Sunpyo Hong and Chin-Sung Chang explore the new paradigms formulated by Korean painters. Some recorded the faces and feasts of the newly created bureaucratic class, others engaged with the conventions of traditional Chinese landscape painting, while still others encoded protests and aspirations into seemingly tranquil genre subjects. The early Joseon dynasty gave rise to one of the most fertile cultural climates in Korean history. This is the first English-language publication to treat this singularly productive period. Very Good/Dust Jacket Included.

Keywords: 9780300148916 korea,korean art,collections,exhibitions Asian Art

Price: EUR 40.00 = appr. US$ 43.47 Seller: Jorge Welsh Works of Art Lda
- Book number: 973B

See more books from our catalog: Collections and Exhibitions